The evening world. Newspaper, January 20, 1904, Page 11

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idate for the Presidency. Mr. Peewee. Mo eye; he leads a strenuous life. able men. tn this week. A Typewriter’s Letters. Prof. Josh M. A. Long: I want to win the typewriter sup- pites, How are these: "T do not think flannel shirt waists are modest.” “Not modest? What can be more than flannel?’ Maud—Yes, she even asked bim what color of hair he liked best. May—That's just Ike: Molly—always Peady to oblige. — _s Mabel—She says Archie stole a kiss from her last night. Mazie—She was equally guilty, she Received the stolen goods. ‘woman in your pocket row! Husband—I'll swear there's not. Wife—Huh, didn’t I see that letter I wrote to mother I gave you to mall ‘ still in your pocket? ] : 1 ‘Wife—There's a letter written by a Little Brother—What does “begging the question” mean? Gister's Beau—It means a girl is trying hard to get a fellow to propose to her. 4 LITTLE BLOND TYPEWRITER, ’ Park Row Building. A Question from Lawyer Fri Prof. Josh 3. A. Long: T have been reading @ poem by Edwin I give below. I want this stanze put in the Old Jokes’ Home until I find out|jow for sure if Mr. Markham is alluding to the Editor of the Evening Fudge. Also, | I think it should win the typewriter , Mipplies, It is the best joke I have heard this season. . EMANUEL FRIBND. Bere's the stanza from the Markham Pile walks abroad upon the Zotiea, ‘To weigh the world in balances, to fuse Buns in his crucible, and carry back s) The spheral music ‘and the coamia news." P. S.—I wonder if it ts good walling on the Zodiac this weather? nF. Prot. Josh M. A Longs ‘These for the typewriter supplies: Mr. Thirdfioor—What's that girl sing~ promise her anything and charge it to me f “What does s fellow like best about " & girl?” was 0 Daniel had written to Lord Wensleydale 2 nan ‘dae which ‘Dick foanha are hi } po see eA CHAPTER® 111. The Death Trap. ("be the door!" thundered Sir Daniel. “We know she ia ther "Quick!" whispered Dick, bis Sad { the girl toward the trap door. They | forced ft open and found themselves at the tp of a filght af steps. Lamp in hand,’ they descended and ran along) the narrow corridor the foot of the stairs. It & Secret pasage, and {through it they hoped to reach safety, Suddenly Dick stopped with a cry. ) Phe passage ended in a blank wall, f ¢ one {9 \coming!"” whispered / Joanna: “Dick act his lamp. on the ‘he whispered. "Str Vaniel Pent me to find you. There ts bar in the wall behind you, and & door will ¢epen~ inte oe By Prof. Josh M. A. Long , Mr. Peewee Our Candidate for the Presidency! HE Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Humor to-day announces its can- t That candidate Is none other than the famous " * ‘Mr. Peewee is an important man. His claims are just tion as others we wot of—at least they are no more ridiculous. He {s cartooned and imitated. With Peewee as President, Prof. Josh M. A. Long as Secretary of State, Dr. Lemonosky as Secretary of the Interior, Dowle 4-11-44 as Secretary of the Treasury and Officer | Jerry Sullivan as Secretary of War, Mr. Peewee ‘There are other joke candidates: why not Mr. Peewee? 2! sve Ses SRL AD THE GREAT TYPEWRITER SUPPLIES CONTEST! . Everybody, men and women, old and young, boys and girls, married and sin- Ae, sweethearta and wives, grass widows and those wearing weeds, girls who are pretty and girls who are good and girls who are pretty good aro all trying to| win the prize of a full set of first-class typewriter supplies for the best joke sent Markham, the closing stanza of whloh| Patrick. cA Great Story of Love, War and Vengeance. NING 2 WORLD'S JANUARY ; cs worthy of considera- He is in the pub- yuld have a Cabinet of remark- “why, his arm, of course!* Miss BELLA W., Stenographer, Mills Building, N. Y. Im the Cemetery and Out. Dear Professor: Kindly enter the fol- lowing for the typewriter suppll 1 HEN a« man {s fascinated, for no ostensible rea- W son, by a plain and uninteresting woman you may safely conclude that it is the trick of her smile and some subtle quality therein that hag en- trapped him. For a woman's smile is the proverbial honey that catches the masculine fly. From Circe down it has been the woman who smiled properly and scientifically as wéll as at the right time who ruled men and made them do foolish things, from bringing her bonbons to bringing her the heads of her gnemies neatly served on a silver dish. ‘The art of smiling does not consist in a mere flash- How Foolish. ing of teeth and eyes, or in the illusive dancing of a Prot, Josti M, A. Long: dimple. The average girl with a pretty row of white “Chumpley bet a man he could walk| teeth, who works day and night to keep up a perpet- from New York to Philadelphia.” ual smiling, whose lips part on the slightest provoca- “Did he do itr? tion, without rhyme or reason, incites a man to a “No; he got half way, decided he| frenzy for pinching her to see if he can make her couldn't do ft and walked back again.| frown. A woman may smile too much as well as too 8. R, DULFON, No. 211 Eldridge st. | little and too warmly as well as too coldly, Even vinegar 1s preferable to an overdose of sugar. There is a certain type of woman who knows how to smile scientifically, She is the woman with the sympathetic smile, the most fascinating smile to the masculine mind and heart; the slow, sweet, half-wist- ful smile, the smile that does not flash upon you all at once, but begins in the eyes and spreads slowly over tne face; the very personal smile, that is ac- companied by a direct, significant and searching glance straight into your own eyes, A woman who has cultivated this smile—for the sympathetic smile is invariably cultivated—can make a fool think him- self brilliant, an old man fancy himself a devilish boy, don’t you know, antl s youngster imagine that he has at last found the woman who understands him. Sho need not be clever; she need not even be a good con- “Would you like to win the typewriter supplies?” “Why, yes.” “"Well, take @ tip on the keys.” 2 Man at a meeting suggesting @ rail around a cemetery. Second Gentleman—Why, nonsense; those that are in there will never come out, and the ones outside, don’t want to go in. EDWARD J. FATH, No. 427 West: Forty-eighth street. Mr Fi Prof. Josh M. A. Long: “Good mornin’, Mrs, Padrick. Wat's de drubble, yer look so blue?” " answered Mrs. gabe Patrick a box ob pills, ter, swallow ter get bedder, “and trick 19 almost dead tryin’ ter ‘swal- i. Tim goin’ ter ask de doctor to pur 26, pills in smaller box, as Patrick awore he will not ew owen in dot big rer foar:o' tearin’ BENJ, Fr Ee No.8 Jefferson street. Prof. Josh M. A. Long! ‘Tis tor the typewriter supplies: of speech is parson tn the following nen sentence, “The parson ate his | Vereationalist,. Whatever a man says, no matter how _ ” deep nor how trivial his remark, nor how much nor “No, conjunction, because parson Joins} NOW ttle she understands of it, her smile will give him an answer that will be all-satisfying. He may be talking pates de fols gras; or discussing Wagner. He may merely remark that Brown's broiled lobster ia the best in town. Her emile will seem to say, “And 4@o you think so, too!" Or he may declare t “Tb- sen dwells too much in the ether; and thet same smile will say, “How clever of you to put ft that way! How perfectly we understand each other!" And the man’s heart will warm to her whether it be @ fossil or only a secondary stomach. Next to the woman with the sympathetic smile a man likes best the girl with @ good, hearty, frank, open smile—a smile that might be called a laugh, and 1g indeed usually accompanied by an irrepressible rip- ple or gurgle. The frank smile does not begin in any one place; it flashes all over the fe it once, Some women fancy that “a frank smile” means merely man and wife. oF NO He Henry wthest. KN Rar the gus have ve, 7pa pote xX : forget our Fisnes, Phare s ss) ‘ Quemygencren | I hear your mother has the typhoid fever. You must atay thr tlelenens soneel till she is well, as on ntagious. lar~You needn't be afraid, She my i etemmorner, and I never eet any: No, 1M Hamburg avente, Brooklyn, Ryeac once, but the DPOOFEEGGHHHEDOO-2S $OO98HHSO996HF-99969060909F09OHHHOS CHESS Feminine Smiles That Fascinate POOODELSODDIODOS OED ODES IOS OSHODIIF HOD IID HOH DIDODE oe parting the lips and opening the eyes wide, so that all one really observes ts a pair of big eyes and a good t of teeth. But a frank smile is a lghting up of the whole face. This is a smile that cannot be cul- tivated. It is the natural, spontaneous expression Ne the girl who is at peace with all the world. When a man is walking along hurriedly, with his troubles welghing down his shdulders and pressing his fore- head into a wrinkle, it Is like @ sudden dose of a stimulant to glance up and meet the glowing eyes yf the girl with the frank smile and to hear that little, bubbling gurgle. The frank smile has the same effect upon @ man as the raising of his window shade on a bright, sunny winter morning, It 4s warming and enlivening and.cheering, But it has not the fascination nor the personal significance of the sym- pathetic smile. There 1s a smile that to some women is as natural a4 a dimple or a curl, It is the significant smile, the SOOEDED Hod COOH Be odE smile of the coquette, the smile that comes with eyes that glance out of the corners and lps that are only half parted, Some women are born flirts, and from the time that they first lure the male members of the family Into bringing them taffy.and sugar plums on the sly to the time when they begin to lure other girls’ sweethearts from them they understand the full value of the significant sm! ther women attempt, by fetching glances of the eyes and making a moue of the lips to cultivate this dangerous smile; but the trouble with the girl who does this is that she usually overdoes it. A smile that is too signif- ant {s as disgusting os tea that is too sweet or @ mmer’s day that {s too sultry. Mixed with the warmth and significance of the coquette’s smile there should always be a spice of the coquette’s indiffer- ence. For a coquette is a pot-pourri. It is the very illustveness of her smile that charms. ‘There {s a little smile that is mightily overdone by many women with dainty, piquant faces. It Is the Infantile smile, the brilliant, babyish smile, that means little, but 1s full of the Joy of living, It Is a dewy smile with an appealing, artless glance and carefully planned “unstudied” expression, a smile that twinkles like a little lost star, a smile that makes the average man want to take a girl up tn hts arms and talk baby talk to her; a smile ¢hat wins love, as a baby coaxes jam from the stern parent; a smile that eyen the “two-seat hog’ in a street car cannot resist until his morning paper 1s finished. ‘The soctety smirk {s a smile that 1s much decried, yets it Is all artifice, {t 1s one of the most useful smiles known to women. The society smirk 1s the cold, meaningless parting of the lips vouchsafed by the average hostess when th butir happns to spill the soup in her lap or an extra guest arrives for din- ner. The soclety woman needs a cloak for her emo- tions, and the popular smirk ts the most perfectly fitting cloak that she can wear. With this made-to- order smile at her command the popular hostess can cover every slip in the domestic regime, every em- barrassing situntion, every personal emott can greet her best friend and the woman she most dislikes with perfect impartiality of expression. The soclety smirk can cover a household full of skeletons. It can hide’a social catastrophe and help make a so- cial defeat look like a triumph. It {s the smile of the social martyr. Like manners, {t may be artificial, but it 1s necessary for the benefit of the many, The so- clety smirk is nothing more nor less than a babit, ace quired by constant association with persons whom one wishes to treat agreeably. It is like a mask ‘which, after having done good service all evenin: may be taken off when one goes to bed at night. Like cabbages and potatoes, it may not be beautiful, but it 1s eminently useful; and to a few—a very few— women, it {s becoming, ‘ as \ room. The rope that let Throgmorton down is still by the window. Go while you have time.” A moment later the two fugitives had reached the room, and Dick was grasp- ing the knotted rope. As she spoke the rush of armed men sounded outside the door. Dick knew they. would not harm the girl, but that they were bent on his own death.. He waited no longer, but with a parting kiss to Joan swung himself from the window and proceeded to let himself] down into the moat. As he crawled up. the opposite bank an arrow from the battlement grazed his scalp and an- other plercéd his shoulder. Faint from pain and loss of blood, he staggered Into the forest. The first ob- Ject that met his view was the body of Throgmorton, S{r Daniel's messenger, hanging from a tree. The letter Sir still stuck from his pocket. curtains to await their return, He had not been long tn this position when he was somewhat strangely dis- turbed, The silence in that upper story of the house was only broken by the fMickering of the flames and the hissing lof @ green log in the chimney; but pres- ently, to Dick’s strained hearing, there came the sound of some one walking with extreme precaution, and soon af- faced, dwarfish fellow, in Lord Shoreby’s colors, pushed first his head and then his crooked body into the chamber. His mouth wes open as though to hear the better, and his eyes, which were very bright, fitted restlessly and swiftly to and fro, He wept round and round the room, striking here and there upon the hangings; but Dick, by a miracle, escaped his notice. Suddenly he picked Up something from among the rushes on the floor, examined it, and, wi jevery signal of d@light, concealed it the wallet at his belt. Dick's heart sank, for the object in avestion was a tassel from his own girdle, and it was plain to him that this dwarfish spy, who took a malign de- light in his employment, would lose no time in bearing it to bis master, the Baron. A yoice, hoarse and broken by drink, began to be audible from the stair, and presently after, uneven. wan- dering and heavy footsteps sounded without along the passage. in apy its| She | All ter the door opened, and a little black-| 44 4 e] 2 By Mme. Judice O94949999O94-8$3-54699O9O004 ” A Lilac Overdress. . Indice If you wish advice concerning new gowns or the making-over of old ones, if you wish advice Loorsayi> ing home’ dressmaking, write “Mme. Judice, Eventiig World, Pullt- zer Building, New York City,” and silk drees, which 4s all spotted from cleaning, Would you advise me to get a black silk | striped grenadine, or a black met of| some fort for an oveniress (@s it 9 too | good to throw away)? If the net, what design would be best to make ft after? | 3 she will Lam thirty-two years old, aeineh busit | @ sive it to. you. in this codes d 5 feet 6 inc all, Mra. G, A. 8. NSS ASS Hackensack. N. J. FOr, tell purposes, Also please Aw lilac ts such a fashionable shade | [ony ee to match my little gifs, this winter, why: not try and match the | years, Ldon't wont wilte bearer eee | shade of your silk in net or grenadine | | and make an entire overdress? It wili xen ‘ire rather short for a three-qides be more modern and youthful for a} | toc caa es And 1 would suggest pared woman of thirty-two than black over i Walst line, a blouse front, as |are slender enough for this effect, Violet-colored velvet collar and tarts (on (on the pinkish tnt) will give you color, skirt for all purposes should be minde with a train, as a walking skirt is not lilac, which is more suited to elderly women, Have It shirred dn a deep yoke and sleeve top, and hip yoke on a full Kirt. with appliques set in of cream Mec 'aotted In black French tints. and | Ways appropriate, Brown beaver or I'll warrant you will be pleased with it. | Velvet hats, with th Sereatns 0 of white or pale blue prim camelt are Very pretty hats for Hetle fire. A Remodeled Jacket. Dear Mme, Judice: Zibeline and Bréadcloth. Dear Mme. Judice: NCLOSED find sample of zibeline, of which I h.to make a coatyKindly let me jw whether? or not to sponge the iso to make @ skirt of black broadeloth, with straps. Can I make the straps raw-edge? Yours truly, 8..GK, I hardly thirik it necessary to sponge your sibeline, aa -the long hair in the cloth wit! protect the under body suffl- clently to avoid spotting. It will at least conceal it. The raw edge strap. mg depends on the quality of the Brogactsher Tf of a frm weave and on the vicuna orler it will not fray out, and be rettier and not so thick as when furnied under. Gray Flaked Zi :eline. Dear Mme. Judice: INDLY suggest a pretty way of K making my dress, the goods belng gray finked zibeline, not.a light gray. I would like a three-quarter coat, but being short I don't think it would become me. My height Is 6 feet 2 Inch 22 waist, short 34 bust, dark hair and eyes, pale complexion, Also what trimming, Should I have a train,| £8! on my skirt? The dress must answer | sible. HAVE 4 loose jacket. It has tight ] sleeves and is trimmed with ap- Plique and bands of dark brown ma- terial. Could I match;the cloth In.@ black and make new Lopate and ed the jacket? You might have a sample oe eine =. dyed black and try to atateh It. having the entire coat dyed, Se very hard to match the rseads oF materials even in black. To Make a Skirt Flare, Dear Mme. Judice: HAVE a black peau de sole wlct#t, ] which has not the fashionable baa What material can I put aie and how can I fix it to make a stylis skirt? ‘The silk is beautiful. We fitted flounce be the thing? M. You failed to describe the cut skirt, and much depends on th 1s a good pattern you can What is Castoria | ASTORIA is a harmless ‘substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Teething Troubles, cures assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and natural sleep. . The children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Havo Always Bought, and which hes been tn wap Soyeuse, hen es ore signature of Chas, H, Fletcher, and bas been made his personal Weiae dobre “Allow no ene to deceive you fn and ‘‘Just-as-good” are but Experiments trifle with and endanger the health of Infante and Children—Expérience against Experiment. Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of Amusements. Amusements. OHAMPIONSHIP HOCKEY MATOH, PROCTOR nae ieee ALG. wast as PE oe AL Cc 23dSt{ Stating Fi asta ie foe. eraser sath ns ‘ena 5th Ave {a AUTOMOBILE SHOW sen MADISON SQUARE GARDEN. enum TOUP. M. ADMISSION, 50¢e, ay & Doth et. Phones, as. 0.2, “AN ENGLISH BAIsy” A, HE ERE cee aan Cer ea od and In BAC! DAS. Next Per ae OTHER GIRL, THE'SECRET OB boledinetce ew LYCEUM “sv es'Gt afte oats LY RIS Bex same fe | om ape Tho Girl from Kay's. Ant Bee iW Per ed ee xDe. GLAD OF IT. Wiltie a: elas PEATE RESERVED ‘Box Offices Open 9.20 A. aan abr, THE MUSICAL COMEDY SUCCESS, THE MEDAL $3 MAIDiczs NEW AMSTERDAM "sic ozs Hist Watisha. MOTHER GOOSE, NBW YORK "eesti “Wik? Sue CHAUNCEY OLCOTT 'pphasx PRICES:8° ALOR, RESERVED, shi Vena 2 #5) Fu TAS Fre, uz, | CRITERION Ree ye <= | AuousTus ‘THOMAS Next Weel TimGivid © GARDENS =| ELEANOR ROBS ae HUDSON ERA so: a ROBERT EDESON, "4% Dhtaares ia Lew Doct S| Cer PASTOR’S ne. Bo BANE ELS AS BURKE, GRACE Lh fis —ONLY MATINEE Day. REVOST & pteloy: road) es Goth Naira attraction, Chas. iB Colby away IRCLE Bxotes” stht. ‘Dan Caawerint y Harpists, Adelaide ACADEMY OF MUSIC, 1ath St.& Irving Pi. Lad: “e re Eva Williams & ec Tucker. Frank Hush, Billy Link, Matthews & Ashley, pANs _ Way awn East 143 “Good!” thought Dick. “If the world Lawless, alas! rolling drunk, was ohanges a) hav ¢ wandering the house, sccking ‘for a “THBATRE, 424 st, neat Bivay Ginetta nek PAS AA AM iol A corner wherein to slumber off the eftect s.| AMBRICAN == \TRe Mate Wed. & Sut & Sat. ; of Sa Mig tom eat tury ae nat an ‘(te Raveicmiad San Bent Etta csocins of his potations. Die inwardly: raged ry ay <a gara | RALPH STUART SY Rear Lancastrian, is sending bribes to the} Daniel Brackley were the chief leaders (@) \ some of the paint of the, disguise on was to be done? If he lost i egos Tii | BARGAIN_MATINEB_TO-DAY, 5c, & We Bly these: Ral \\ your tace off. But that can be mended, | {ouch Of Lastens for the night ho was BABES TOVLAND 2s il alte, asta: WALLALA’S, Er $00 chs Bat Se Reeling onward, the letter in his} Hichard had won the friendship and SH What cannot be mended, Dick—or | forth Joanna's rescue, Ifean tes ary Compelg a Be xs bovom, Richard encountered wilh |CONfidence of Lord Foxham, Joanna's ) much fear tt cannot—1s my marrige} nand, he dared to address the arvtn | WEBER & FIELDS’ Eat am The COUNT) TY EHAIRMAN Lawless, Ellis Duckworth's right-hand | anitul Lea ah dee at ears bore ay, outlaw, the spy might stilt police Pasa ht AIR el aa ps THE MATINEE TO-DAY, man, The latter jel had abducted her. “Ig tt decided, then?” asked the lad. vas. 8 Mats, boy bodily and sa Beets tue it was nearly a year since Dick had ‘To-morrow, before ncon, Dick, in the | With" slsht, and ‘the most fatal con. | Tues. & Hat Whoop-De LWA. DEWEY TIGER LILIES BURLESOUERS, worth, who, ne hia dead father's friend. Hosen ott the Soman hs loved. One abbey church,” she enswered, “John | *eduences ensue. The spy slipped from |Knlekerbocker.Bway,38St Ev.§ Mat Sat? BURLESQUE—""Vaudevilie." AR sreoted him warmly. night therefore (as he waited at Shore- Matcham and Joanna Sedley both shall} hy, teano, z PS Late ac yaa Richard was revived and told nis| DY fOr # chance to capture her) he and come to a right miserable end. There| Dick le Patan paraiso eee AG ELIA BINGHAM HURT &s SEAMON Sire. : story to the outlaw, who promised him | ‘*Wless dlsgulsed themselves as 'beg-) sie threw her arma about his|%8 AO help in tears, or I could weep) noises ho hissed; “beast and ee évery. protection. ging monks, and in this gutse boldly mine eyes out. I have not spared my- ! x Be THEATRE, Bve., 8. ‘ve.$.90. Mate, Th “ it neck and gave him a hundred ki | man! It is worse than treachery to be| BELASC 3 ip: See, “Join my band," gata Duckworth.| *"tered 2° Daniel's house. ence ehui self to pray, but Heaven frowns on my | © 5 Ww Y e Sat'y a2. HENRIETTA WUDE i] “We must vanish from this neighbor,| While Lawless remained in an outel: petition, And, dear Dick—good Dick—-| #9 Witess, We may all be lost by thy EL-ASCO'S new play | TREATRE, CAND (CANDID ( hood, for Sir Daniel's men are muster-| *ied: drinking with the men at arms|he stood hearkening he saw the arras| but that ye c: ot me forth of this] drunkenness KITTY BELLATE a bP: Ing too thick for us. But our time win} bout hige fire, Richard made his| (curtain) wave along the wall; thers | housn before the morning, we must But Lawless only laughed and stag. q IRE WELCH SRE" come.” way into, the house and wandered|was the sound of a door being opened, | oven kiss and “by ered and tried to clap young Shelton | eaten, Peden SIF Bee his among the upper rooms in search of|the hangings divided, and lamp. in ot 1; Twill never} en the back ‘ ih \ it Joars bala; Joanna’ Belay’ ¢hlared’ thera art-| say ) like despair; but} And Just then Dick's quick ear caught | — | Hay ENE Os Ti A year had passed. The tide of war} A hand suddenly plucked his sleeve. | ment. while there's life, fs hope.|* rapid brushing in the arras, Ho} u Aes bat deve had turned again in favor of Lancaster, | He tuyned to _Bee an/ undersized young} "Dick!" she cried. “Dick!""\, * | Yet will 1 hope. the mass, and] !cuped toward the sound, and the next mw ini E HORE xo that Sir Dantel had not found it nec- | jirl,,.with a‘ merry, inquisitive ta ‘And then, to the wonder of the Iad,| triumph! If the deep sea were thara 1] moment a piece of the wall-hanging va A CHINES essary to espouse the Yorkist cause, but] After one look at him she said: this beautiful and tall young lady made| would straight through it; ff the way] had beon torn down and Dick and tho METROPOLIS OUR NEW MINISTER, geen pentane en aT were sprawling together in s Ave. Brooklyn Amusements, was high in the favor of the Lancastri-| “Stand here and walt!” and vanished nto the next room, TW the next room he heard a stir as of @ person moving; then followed a sigh, ich sounded strangely near; and then rustle of skirts amd tap of fect. As but one step the Lancaster nobles were dear Dick! wolf} about bis neck and gave him a hun- dred kisses all in one, “Oh, the fool fellow! Oh, Alack!" ghe. added, pausing, “ of it and threw her arms like mice," But presently there hind them, and they short young la come anna to suppe she erled, “On, ff ye could see you were full of lions, 1 wculd scatter them ¢ aware of the to summon Jo- Dick hid behind the Re yn) SFDC os Co RNS Sm EEO Ee Deere ee folds. Oyer and over they rolled, grap-! pling for each other's throat, and st}Il! bamed by the arras, and still silent Ty thelr deadly fury. (To Be Continued.) a nolse be- | WEST END D eae i age! Wyices, 2p. ra id nome a MAUDE be

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